1 January – It was revealed that 184 people were killed on Irish roads in 2023, the highest number of fatalities in almost a decade.[1]
4 January – A second man died in hospital following a shooting at a Dublin restaurant on Christmas Eve.[2]
5 January – Focus Ireland and the Simon Community described newly released record figures for homelessness (from November 2023) as "shocking", with 9,409 adults and 4,105 children now homeless.[3]
A coroner's inquest held in London found that Sinéad O'Connor died from natural causes.[5]
10 January – Gardaí began an investigation into human trafficking after ten Kurdish people from Iran and Iraq, three people from Vietnam, and one from Turkey were discovered in a refrigerated container that arrived at Rosslare Europort.[6]
17 January – A convent in Lanesborough, County Longford which had been designated as accommodation for Ukrainian refugees was set on fire.[9]
18 January – A man died following an explosion at a homeless hostel in Dublin city centre.[10]
19 January – The European Court of Human Rights announced that Ireland launched legal action against the United Kingdom on 17 January over the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 that gives amnesty to British soldiers and members of paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.[11][12]
22 January
Senator David Norris retired from the Seanad after 36 years service. In his final speech, he deplored the slaughter in Gaza: "What is happening to the people of Gaza is appalling and cannot be allowed to continue."[13]
The Supreme Court decided unanimously that an unmarried father whose partner died is entitled to a widower's pension. The Minister for Social Protection originally refused him the pension; now, the Government must change social welfare law to comply with the court's decision that the department was guilty of unconstitutional discrimination. There are roughly 170,000 cohabiting couples in the State.[14]
It was reported that President Michael D. Higgins had been awarded the United Nations Agricola Medal. It was later presented by the Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Qu Dongyu, in a ceremony at Áras an Uachtaráin on 7 June. Higgins was selected by the FAO "in recognition of [his] contribution and commitment to the welfare of all peoples, [his] extraordinary support for FAO's fundamental goal of attaining universal food security, and the pursuit of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals."[16]
Homelessness figures for December were released, showing a slight drop in numbers to 13,318 people, including more than 3,900 children, accessing homelessness services in December. This was the first drop recorded in months, but it is not expected to be sustained.[17]
February
1 February
A murder investigation began after a post-mortem examination found that remains which were discovered in east Cork were those of a 47-year-old man who went missing in September 2023.[18]
The new Deposit Return Scheme became active. Henceforth, when empty and undamaged plastic, aluminium or steel containers are returned to participating shops and supermarkets, a small deposit, added to the original cost of purchase, is refunded.[19]
13 February – A 37-year-old woman was charged with the murder of her six-year-old son who was found unresponsive in a car in County Waterford.[20]
16 February – Gardaí seized 546kg of crystal methamphetamine worth €32.8million at Cork Port. The quantity seized was by far the largest ever captured in Ireland. The haul, destined for Australia, was believed to belong to the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel. Two suspects were arrested and firearms were seized.[21][22]
23 February – Record homelessness figures were released by the Department of Housing, showing that in January, 13,531 people were making use of emergency accommodation, including over 4,000 children. The figures did not include more than 1,000 asylum seekers.[23]
29 February – President Michael D. Higgins was taken to hospital as a precaution, after complaining of feeling unwell.[24]
March
2 March – A man in his 40s was hospitalised with serious injuries after masked men armed with machetes and slash hooks stormed an Under-14 boxing event in Castlerea, County Roscommon.[25]
Four men were arrested and a firearm seized following a Garda operation in Dublin, during which a man who was reported kidnapped in Belfast was found safe and well.[30]
9 April – Fine Gael leader Simon Harris, aged 37, became Ireland's youngest Taoiseach after a Dáil vote of 88–69 and being appointed by the President.[37]
10 April – A large fire destroyed industrial units in Dublin known as the 'home of car culture in Ireland'.[38] The buildings were home to Deane Motors, Drift Games and JC Autocare.[39]
28 April – Taoiseach Simon Harris said that other countries' migration policies "cannot be allowed to undermine" that of Ireland after it emerged that 80% of recent migrant arrivals in Ireland were people who crossed from the UK.[43]
30 April – Cabinet approved legislation drawn up by Minister for Justice Helen McEntee that would re-designate the UK as a "safe country" to which asylum seekers can be returned.[44]
May
2 May – The Irish Times Group announced that it had acquired the death notice website, RIP.ie. The website was launched in 2005 and received 60 million page views per month when sold.[45]
6 May – Gardaí launched an investigation after a man was shot dead in the Drimnagh area of Dublin shortly after midnight.[46]
13 May – The New York–Dublin Portal connecting the two cities via video screens was temporarily turned off, following reports that participants were behaving inappropriately.[48][49]
19 May – Dublin City Council announced that the New York–Dublin Portal would reopen, but with hours limited between 11am and 9pm instead of 24 hours.[50]
22 May – The three leaders of the Coalition Government – Taoiseach Simon Harris, Tánaiste Micheál Martin, and Minister Eamon Ryan – announced that Ireland, Norway, and Spain would recognise the State of Palestine on 28 May. In response, the Israeli foreign ministry said it would reprimand the three countries' ambassadors to Israel and show them video of female hostages being held by Hamas. Israel also recalled its own ambassadors to the three countries, having argued that such recognition would encourage Hamas terrorism.[51]
Former Circuit Court judge Gerard O'Brien was sent to prison for four years for sexually assaulting six boys and for the attempted rape of one of them.[53]
Gardaí in Dublin began wearing body cameras for the first time. It was planned to extend the practice to the whole country eventually.[54]
13 June – A former scout leader, Noel Sheehan of Glenville, County Cork, was sentenced to 4½ years in prison, with the final six months suspended, for the sexual assault and psychological damage of young scouts during the late 1980s.[56]
A 22-year-old soldier who beat a woman unconscious in a random street attack, and boasted about it on social media, walked free from court after Judge Tom O'Donnell gave him a fully suspended sentence which the victim described as "not justice".[59]
Aer Lingus confirmed it would cancel between 10 and 20 percent of its flights over the first five days of planned industrial action by pilots, affecting up to 40,000 passengers.[60]
21 June
The Defence Forces began internal proceedings in relation to the case of a soldier who beat a woman unconscious in an attack, which Tánaiste and Minister for Defence Micheál Martin "condemns unequivocally".[61]
The Irish Airline Pilots Association announced an official eight-hour strike on 29 June, in addition to its indefinite work-to-rule.[62]
22 June – Thousands of people marched in cities around Ireland to protest against the suspended court sentence given to the soldier Cathal Crotty who beat Natasha O’Brien unconscious during a random street attack in Limerick in 2022. The taoiseach, Simon Harris, condemned the attack as part of "an epidemic of gender-based violence".[63]
25 June – Jack Chambers was named as the new Finance Minister to succeed Michael McGrath.[65]
27 June
Taoiseach Simon Harris described a bomb threat made on his family home as "utterly unacceptable".[66]
A report into serving members of the Defence Forces found 68 personnel had criminal convictions or were currently before the courts on criminal charges which ranged from drink-driving to rape.[67]
29 June – Hundreds of striking Aer Lingus pilots marched at Dublin Airport as part of a dispute with the airline over pay.[68]
10 July – Authorities in Dubai confirmed that charges of attempted suicide and alcohol consumption against 28-year-old Irish woman Tori Towey were dropped and a travel ban imposed had been lifted, after her case was raised in the Dáil. Taoiseach Simon Harris said this was a situation that "should never have happened".[71]
12 July – Minister for Rural and Community Development Heather Humphreys described plans to ban the XL bully crossbreed dog, which would include fines of up to €2,500, a prison term, or both for those in breach of the ban.[72]
13 July – Taoiseach Simon Harris met Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky at Shannon Airport as the latter briefly visited Ireland on his way back to Kyiv from the 2024 Washington summit, and announced he would visit Kyiv later in the year.[73]
14 July – Róisín Garvey was elected as deputy leader of the Green Party.[74]
15 July
Twenty-one people were arrested and charged after public disorder took place at a former factory in Coolock, Dublin intended to house asylum seekers, in which three garda cars were damaged, petrol bombs thrown, and fires lit on the roads.[75]
17 July – A death threat was made against Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald in a video posted on TikTok by a man who said he would shoot and kill her.[77]
Three gardaí were injured, including one hospitalised, and one arrest was made after anti-immigration disturbances broke out in Coolock for a second time.[79]
27 July – Gardaí and Department of Agriculture personnel investigated a suspected cockfighting event at a home in Emyvale, County Monaghan. A crowd of people ran away as the gardaí arrived. Fifteen dead cocks and seventy live ones were seized.[80]
15 August – An Irish Army chaplain in his 50s was seriously injured after being stabbed a number of times outside Renmore Barracks in County Galway. A terror motive was investigated and a 16-year-old boy was arrested.[84]
17 August – A teenage boy was charged in connection with the stabbing of an Army chaplain at Renmore Barracks.[85]
21 August – A man was arrested in Dublin over a 1982 bomb attack in County Armagh during the Troubles that killed three officers of the Royal Ulster Constabulary.[86] He was remanded in custody the following day pending an extradition hearing.[87]
30 August – Figures for homeless people living in emergency accommodation reached another record high, with 10,028 adults and 4,401 children living in emergency accommodation in July – the seventh conscutive month which broke homelessness records.[89]
September
3 September – A Government-appointed inquiry revealed that 2,395 allegations of sexual abuse had been made in 308 primary and secondary schools run by religious orders across Ireland, spanning a 30-year period. Minister for Education Norma Foley said the level of abuse was "truly shocking" and a commission of investigation would be established.[90]
17 September – The National Parks and Wildlife Service reported that a record 78,175 wild deer were killed by hunters during the year ending on 28 February 2023, mostly in counties Wicklow, Cork, Waterford, Tipperary, Kerry, Galway and Clare. Deer are legally protected but lack natural predators in Ireland therefore hunting is allowed to control overpopulation in order to limit habitat damage by the animals.[94]
19 September – Nineteen people were arrested at an anti-immigration rally that saw multiple public order incidents across central Dublin.[95]
21 September
Minister for Justice Helen McEntee confirmed she had dropped plans to introduce specific hate speech legislation, but would instead include the hate speech element in new draft legislation.[96]
A monument was unveiled by members of the Spanish Navy at Streedagh Beach near Grange, County Sligo during the annual commemoration of the deaths of more than 1,100 Spaniards on 21 September 1588, when three ships of the Spanish Armada sank there.[97]
28 September – Sinn Féin president Mary Lou McDonald told her party's annual conference that the next Irish government will include a Minister for Reunification if Sinn Féin are part of the administration.[98]
October
1 October – The Minister for Finance, Jack Chambers, and the Minister for Public Expenditure, Paschal Donohoe, unveiled Budget 2025, with energy credits, bonus social welfare payments, a higher minimum wage and tax changes announced.[99]
2 October – The president of Vietnam, Tô Lâm, began a two-day state visit to Ireland by meeting President Higgins and his wife, Sabina, at Áras an Uachtaráin. The two leaders held wide-ranging talks during this first state visit to Ireland by a Vietnamese president, reciprocating Higgins' inaugural visit by an Irish president to Vietnam in 2016. Lâm returned to the Áras for a state dinner in the evening along with members of the Irish Vietnamese community.[100]
3 October – A teenager who killed a 51-year-old woman in County Offaly in September 2023 and posted a video of the murder on Snapchat was given a sentence of life in detention with a review after 15 years.[101]
6 October – A newspaper story was published that an unnamed Oireachtas politician had been recruited as a spy by Russia, using a honeytrap approach (seduction). The alleged event occurred during the Brexit talks, when Russia sought to undermine relations between Ireland, Britain, and the European Union. The taoiseach remarked that it should not surprise anyone.[102]
15 October – Niall Ó Donnghaile revealed that he was the Sinn Féin member who was suspended for sending inappropriate messages to a teenage boy and an adult in September 2023. Party leader Mary Lou McDonald told the Dáil that ÓDonnghaile resigned, following allegations of the sending of inappropriate messages to a 17-year-old male.[103]
18 October – An Uisce Éireann document seen by the broadcaster RTÉ's Prime Time team said that more than 40 years will be needed to correct wastewater treatment problems and public water infrastructure deficiencies in Ireland. This estimated lengthy delay conflicts dramatically with an analysis published by the Environmental Protection Agency which projects necessary corrections being achieved in half the time; it conflicts with a government goal to restore water quality by 2027; and it further delays the long-overdue fulfillment of Irish obligations under the European Union's Water Framework Directive.[104]
20 October – The teenager who received inappropriate messages from Niall ÓDonnghaile revealed he was 16-years-old at the time, contradicting a claim by Mary Lou McDonald that he was 17 and called for her apology for the party's "disastrous handling" of his case, saying her tribute to ÓDonnghaile when he resigned was "like a mental stab".[107]
22 October – Convicted murderer Thomas McCabe, arrested by gardaí in August 2024 after being on the run for a year, was returned to prison in Northern Ireland.[108]
31 October – An internet rumour that a Hallowe'en parade would take place on O'Connell Street in Dublin attracted hundreds of people into the city. The hoax led to brief public transport disruption and gardaí asked the crowd to disperse.[109]
November
1 November – Health Minister Stephen Donnelly announced that the Irish Government would fund 150 places for students to study health at Ulster University at a cost of €9.5m (£8m).[110]
5 November – A civil sexual assault case taken by Nikita Ní Laimhín against fighter Conor McGregor began in the High Court. The rape was alleged to have taken place in December 2018.[111]
8 November – President Higgins dissolved the Dáil at the request of Taoiseach Harris. A three-week election campaign began for a general election on 29 November.[112]
9 November – Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary criticised teachers at a Fine Gael party gathering saying, "The Dáil is full of teachers ... but I wouldn't generally employ a lot of teachers to go out and get things done." His remarks were angrily condemned later by the leaders of the main political parties and by teacher unions.[113]
12 November – The postal service An Post ended the use of savings stamps, which had largely been used by young savers.[114]
22 November
The taoiseach said that the prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, would be arrested if he set foot in Ireland. This followed the issuance of an arrest warrant for Netanyahu by the International Criminal Court the previous day for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.[115]
The fighter Conor McGregor was found guilty of rape in the High Court. The jury awarded the plaintiff €250,000 in damages. It emerged after the verdict was announced that the plaintiff's partner had been stabbed when attackers wearing balaclavas invaded her home in June.[116]
23 November
Several thousand homes in Donegal were left without power after Storm Bert brought heavy rain and high winds to Ireland.[117]
Justice Minister Helen McEntee commended the plaintiff in the Conor McGregor case for her "bravery and determination".[118]
5 December – Irish dry stone wall construction (using stones only, with no mortar) was added to the UNESCO list of intangible cultural heritages. This was the fifth Irish practice recognised by the UN following hurling, uilleann piping, Irish harping, and Irish falconry.[124]
7 December – More than 400,000 homes and businesses were without power after Storm Darragh brought strong northwest winds to the country with gusts of up to 141km/h. Met Éireann had issued a Status Red warning for seven counties, with a Status Orange warning for the rest of the country. The Electricity Supply Board said the storm's effect was greater than that of Storm Ophelia in 2017.[125]
8 December – Syrian refugees gathered in Ballaghaderreen and Clonskeagh to celebrate the sudden fall of the Assad regime in their home country. News from Damascus was slightly delayed in Ballaghaderreen by interruption of the electricity supply caused by Storm Darragh.[126]
9 December – Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin and Fine Gael leader Simon Harris held talks aimed at forming the next government; both parties later released a joint statement confirming negotiations would begin the following day.[127]
11 December – The president of Egypt, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, paid a courtesy call to President Higgins and had lunch with Taoiseach Harris. He talked with both men about Palestine and Syria, and about ties between Egypt and Ireland. It was the first Irish trip by an Egyptian president since Hosni Mubarak visited in 2006.[128][129]
15 December
Israel announced that it will close its embassy in Ireland because of what was described as "the extreme anti-Israel policies of the Irish government". The taoiseach said the decision was "deeply regrettable" while the tánaiste said Ireland did not intend to respond in kind.[130]
An Post announced it was abandoning its plan to use Holyhead Port for Christmas deliveries as the port will remain closed until 18 December as a result of damage caused by Storm Darragh.[131]
18 December
Taoiseach Simon Harris visited Áras an Uachtaráin to tender his resignation to President Higgins; he will continue to serve until a successor is appointed. The 34th Dáil met for the first time and Verona Murphy was elected as the first female Ceann Comhairle in Dáil Eireann. The Sinn Féin party nominated Mary Lou McDonald as taoiseach but the motion was defeated. The Dáil adjourned after voting to return on 22 January; many opposition TDs preferred 15 January but they were outvoted.[132]
The Department of Defence ordered a new government jet, a French Falcon 6X, currently under construction, to replace the existing troublesome 30-year-old Learjet. Delivery is expected by December 2025 at a cost of €53 million plus tax.[133]
22 December – The Health Service Executive reported that at least 2,700 cyclists were treated for injuries as hospital in-patients in the past two years. The figures included only publicly-funded acute hospitals and did not include patients treated in emergency departments or as out-patients, so did not account for all cycling injuries.[134]
10 March – Cillian Murphy became the first Irish-born actor to win the best actor award at the Oscar ceremony in Hollywood, California for his leading performance in the film Oppenheimer.[139]
11 May – Bambie Thug came sixth place in the Eurovision Song Contest, marking the country's first top-ten finish since 2011.[140]
28 July – President Higgins led tributes to writer Edna O'Brien who died the previous day, aged 93, describing her as "a fearless teller of truths" and "a superb writer possessed of the moral courage to confront Irish society with realities long ignored and suppressed." Taoiseach Simon Harris described O'Brien as "a brave, gifted, dignified and magnetic person".[141]
7 November – A football supporter won a court case against the Football Association of Ireland in Dublin District Court because the FAI failed to update its website to advise the public of a change of date for an international away match in Armenia in 2022. The plaintiff was awarded damages to compensate him for extra travelling costs he incurred because of the wrong match date information.[143]
4 April – The GAA defended its decision to report Supermac's to Meta over an April Fool's post which featured an altered image of Croke Park stadium, saying "the use of any registered trademark is not permitted, in jest or otherwise", resulting in the Supermac's Instagram and Facebook accounts being suspended.[173]
12 August – Ireland's Olympic athletes were welcomed home from the games in Paris by a crowd at Dublin Airport. Another gathering of 20,000 people in O'Connell Street, Dublin attended the first civic reception ever held for returning Olympic athletes. Officials greeting the team included the taoiseach Simon Harris, the lord mayor of Dublin James Geoghegan, the minister for sport Catherine Martin, and the minister of state for sport and physical education Thomas Byrne. Team Ireland's 133 athletes competed in 14 sports and won seven medals, coming 19th on the medals table, Ireland's greatest success at the Olympic games.[175]
15 June – Five women swam a relay of the North Channel between Ireland and Scotland, starting in 11.8 °C water from Donaghadee and reaching Portpatrick. Afric Creedon, Jackie O'Connor, Karen Molloy, Orla Colreavy, and Siobhán O'Driscoll took half a day to swim a curved 42.2 kilometre route whose course was shaped by the tide.[192]
18 September – Toto Schillaci, 59, Italian association footballer and figure in Irish footballing folklore whose goal in a 1990 World Cup quarter final match ended Ireland's most successful run in a major international football competition and broke their dreams of proceeding further in the tournament.[291][292]
Santo Klara dari Montefalco Klara dari Montefalco (1268 - 18 Agustus 1308) yang juga sering disebut sebagai Santa Salib Klara adalah seorang biarawati Agustinus.[1] Ia lahir di Montefalco, Umbria sekitar tahun 1268.[1] Ayah Klara membuat sebuah pertapaan di dalam kota, di mana Joan, salah satu saudara Klara dan Andreola, teman Klara hidup sebagai Tertiari Fransiskan.[2] Pada tahun 1274, ketika Klara berusia sekitar 6 tahun, Uskup dari Spoleto mengizinkan Joan untuk men...
Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang perusahaan perbankan asal Britania Raya. Untuk hal yang mungkin dipluralisasi menjadi Barclays, lihat Barclay (disambiguasi). Barclays plcKantor pusat Barclays di LondonJenisPerusahaan publikKode emitenLSE: BARCNYSE: BCSKomponen FTSE 100IndustriPerbankanJasa keuanganDidirikan17 November 1690; 333 tahun lalu (1690-11-17) di Kota London, Kerajaan InggrisKantorpusatLondon, Inggris, Britania RayaTokohkunciNigel Higgins(Chairman)C. S. Venkatakrishnan(CEO)Pro...
Colombian tennis player Nicolás Barrientos GalloCountry (sports) ColombiaResidenceCali, ColombiaBorn (1987-04-24) 24 April 1987 (age 36)Colombia[1]Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)Turned pro2009PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)CollegeUniversity of West FloridaPrize money$ 572,611SinglesCareer record1–5 (in ATP World Tour and Grand Slam main draw matches, and in Davis Cup)Career titles0Highest rankingNo. 237 (21 September 2015)Current...
Volunteer reserve force of the Royal Navy RNR redirects here. For other uses, see RNR (disambiguation). Wavy Navy redirects here. For video game, see Navy (video game). Royal Naval ReserveActive1859–presentCountry United KingdomAllegianceKing Charles IIIBranch Royal NavyTypeNaval reserveRoleVolunteer ReserveWebsiteRoyal Naval ReserveCommandersFlag Officer ReservesRear Admiral Philip HallyCommander Maritime ReservesCommodore Jo Adey[1]Commodore-in-ChiefPrince Michael of Ken...
العلاقات الدنماركية الصومالية الدنمارك الصومال الدنمارك الصومال تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات الدنماركية الصومالية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين الدنمارك والصومال.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتين: �...
Ente nazionale per l'aviazione civile ENAC sede principale di Roma SiglaENAC Stato Italia TipoEnte pubblico Istituito25 luglio 1997 daGoverno Prodi I PredecessoreRegistro aeronautico italiano (RAI), Ente nazionale gente dell'aria (ENGA), Direzione generale dell'aviazione civile (Civilavia) PresidentePierluigi Di Palma Direttore generaleAlessio Quaranta Bilancio210,3 milioni di euro (2015)[1] Impiegati838[2] Sedeviale Castro Pretorio, 11800185 Roma via Gaeta, 300185 Roma v...
Regional council in IsraelMerom HaGalil מרום הגלילRegional council (from 1950)Country IsraelDistrictNorthernGovernment • Head of MunicipalityAmit SuperArea • Total178,000 dunams (178 km2 or 69 sq mi)Population (2014) • Total14,600 • Density82/km2 (210/sq mi)Websitewww.mrg.org.il The Merom HaGalil Regional Council (Hebrew: מועצה אזורית מרום הגליל, Mo'atza Azorit Mero...
CarnoNome orig.Κάρνος Caratteristiche immaginarieSessoMaschio ProfessioneIndovino Carno (in greco antico: Κάρνος?, Kárnos), noto anche come Carneio o Carneo, è un personaggio della mitologia greca. Fu un Indovino. Indice 1 Genealogia 2 Mitologia 3 Note 4 Voci correlate Genealogia Figlio di Zeus e di Europa, fu adottato da Apollo e Leto.[1] Mitologia Carno era un indovino proveniente dall'Acarnania. Quando giunse presso l'esercito degli Eraclidi che, riuniti a Naupa...
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (December 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Historic site in Toronto, OntarioThe GrangeThe Grange in 2005LocationToronto, OntarioCoordinates43°39′11″N 79°23′33″W / 43.65306°N 79.39250°W / 43.65306; -79.39250Built1817Original useManor houseCurrent useA wing of t...
Untuk tempat lain yang bernama sama, lihat Kuningan (disambiguasi). Kabupaten KuninganKabupatenTranskripsi bahasa daerah • Aksara Sundaᮊᮥᮔᮤᮍᮔ᮪Tari Buyung khas KuninganBangunan tempat Perundingan Linggajati dilaksanakan. LambangJulukan: Kota KudaMotto: Rapih winangun kerta raharja(Sunda) Tertib, teratur, dan penuh semangat membangun demi terciptanya kemakmuran dan kesejahteraan lahir-batinPetaKuninganPetaTampilkan peta Jawa BaratKuninganKuningan (Jawa)T...
Adipati Agung Ferdinand Karl Joseph (litografi oleh Joseph Kriehuber, 1841). Adipati Agung Ferdinand Karl Joseph dari Austria-Este (25 April 1781 – 5 November 1850) merupakan putra ketiga Adipati Agung Ferdinand dari Austria-Este dan istrinya Putri Maria Beatrice Ricciarda d'este, anggota terakhir dan ahli waris Wangsa Este. Untuk sebagian besar Peperangan Napoleon dia memimpin tentara Austria. Ferdinand lahir di Milan. Dia menghadiri akademi militer di Wiener Neustadt sebelum memulai karie...
Airport in Argentina. For airports in the Malvinas, see List of airports in the Falkland Islands. Rosario – Islas Malvinas International AirportAeropuerto Internacional de Rosario – Islas MalvinasIATA: ROSICAO: SAARSummaryAirport typePublicOperatorProvince of Santa FeServesRosario, ArgentinaElevation AMSL85 ft / 26 mCoordinates32°54′13″S 60°47′04″W / 32.90361°S 60.78444°W / -32.90361; -60.78444 (Rosario - Islas Malvinas Internatio...
This is a list of the mammal species recorded in Saint Lucia. Of the mammal species in Saint Lucia, two are vulnerable and two are considered to be extinct.[1] The following tags are used to highlight each species' conservation status as assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature: EX Extinct No reasonable doubt that the last individual has died. EW Extinct in the wild Known only to survive in captivity or as a naturalized populations well outside its previous rang...
British short-range jet airliner One Eleven and 1-11 redirect here. For the record label, see One Eleven Records. For other uses, see 1/11. One-Eleven A TAROM One-Eleven Role Short-range jet airlinerType of aircraft National origin United Kingdom Manufacturer British Aircraft CorporationRomaero First flight 20 August 1963[1] Introduction 1965 with British United Airways Retired 7 May 2019 Status Retired[2] Primary users British AirwaysAmerican AirlinesBraniff AirwaysBriti...
Revolt against the Abbasid Caliphate Zanj RebellionMap of Iraq and al-Ahwaz at the time of the Zanj revolt.Date869–883LocationLower Mesopotamia and Al-AhwazResult Abbasid victoryBelligerents Abbasid Caliphate Zanj rebels Slaves Allied Arabs Banu Tamim[1] Banu Asad ibn Khuzaymah[1] Bahila[2]Commanders and leaders Abu Ahmad al-MuwaffaqAbu al-'Abbas ibn al-MuwaffaqMusa ibn BughaAbu al-SajMasrur al-BalkhiAhmad ibn LaythawayhIbrahim ibn Muhammad Ali ibn MuhammadYahya ibn ...
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Georges BrassensGeorges Brassens au Théâtre national populaire en 1966.BiographieNaissance 22 octobre 1921SèteDécès 29 octobre 1981 (à 60 ans)Saint-Gély-du-FescSépulture Cimetière Le PyNom de naissance Georges Charles BrassensNationalité françaiseActivité Auteur-compositeur-interprètePériode d'activité 1951-1981Autres informationsInstruments Guitare, pianoLabel Philips RecordsGenre artistique Chanson françaiseDistinctions Prix Vincent-Scotto (1963)Grand prix de poésie de...
Questa voce sull'argomento centri abitati della California è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. IndependenceCDPIndependence – Veduta LocalizzazioneStato Stati Uniti Stato federato California ConteaInyo TerritorioCoordinate36°48′10″N 118°12′00″W36°48′10″N, 118°12′00″W (Independence) Altitudine1 198 m s.l.m. Superficie12,605 km² Abitanti669 ...
Schwemmkegel in den französischen Pyrenäen Ein Schwemmkegel, auch Schwemmfächer, Geröllfächer, Sandurs oder alluvialer Fächer genannt, ist ein subaerischer fluviatiler (angeschwemmter) Sedimentkörper, der dort entsteht, wo ein Fließgewässer abrupt an Gefälle verliert, typischerweise beim Austritt aus einem Hochgebiet in tieferliegendes, schwächer reliefiertes Gelände.[1][2][3] Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Beschreibung 2 Bedeutung für den Menschen 3 Erkennbarkeit a...